\ apa ‘ ae 32 victory’ Monday ‘tha . (CP) — —, Paolo ‘toss! ae ine ‘ais ‘and nee tatians into the Cup semifinals.” ay The: ‘Brazilians’ unexpected ex "dom the tournament ‘of the one ‘team. Phe semifinals Thursday’ will pl Htaly" , against Poland, a rematch of thelr t-0 first- iy ‘meeting, and West Germany against France, CBC-TV will carry: both ‘games, Italy-Poland. at noon EDT and West Germany vs. France at 2: 30 p.m. ‘EDT, (CBC-TV, 1:30 p.m. EDT); the winners _ play for the Cup on Sunday (CBC-TV, 1: 30 p.m, EDT) in Madrid. | It was because of its aplrt of adventure . and the refusal to seek the tie it needed - = that Brazil today finds itself among the World Cup onlookers. - As ‘the Brazilians concentrated thelr '' ‘effarts on attack they gave Juventus * “ centre-forward Rossi the freedom of thei ” penalty area on three accasions — all with ‘disgatroud consequences. “Spain, meanwhile, made peace with its fans by battling England to a scoreless tie, a result which meant nothing for Spain in we, the’ _stundings| bul which sent England The Joser's play for third place Saturday. : ‘shocks everyone Vee \! home “and gave Wes Yn b down “ ‘berth; “while a "aurpreingly powerful “ ach tear wamped: Norther mand Captain Socrates sald: pothing Tealy began with three ties, then beat * defending champion Argentina 2-1. The ~ innovative Brazilians: had: four - straight - victories in this tournament, had nat lost a ‘World Cup, match aince. 1974 and had not : ‘missed the Cup semifinals since 1966. In‘ “the” Brazilian city of Sao Paulo, hospitals. reported a high incidence of heart failure after Monday’s match and a domestic news agency said police had te _break.up groups of angry fans who were * - fighting or smashing television sets. © The 25-year-old Rossi scored in the fifth, 25th and 75th minutes. “Brazil's ‘Socrates : ‘mached the first’ goal inthe 12th minute, Roberto Falego tled the store again in the 67th minute, but a furlous Brazilian assault on the goal was unable to equal ~ Rossi's third goal. England also played’ desperately for a victory, which it needed advance,:but was frustrated by a determined ‘Spanish defence. ; The Spanish, who had lost twice and whose one win and one tie were tainted by - controversial officiating, treated the 0-0 tie with England as a vie -Moongazers delighted CHICAGO (AP) — The longest total lunar eclipse of the century blotted out the moon early today, delighting thousands of -moongazers, sightseers, merrymakers and gcientists who gathered to watch it. Hundreds gathered to catch the free . show .at. the Adler Planetarium on the Chicago lakefront, Jt wasa celestial finale to the. U.S. Independence Day weekend. The eclipse was total at 2:38 a.m. EDT, but the red color predicted" ‘by many astronomers in the upper atmosphere did « not. materjalize in the Chicago area, ‘although witnesses in New York reparted "an orange color, it was the longest total dunar eclipse | ‘since 1959... The Earth’s penumbra, or lighter: area : . of shadow,-began lo. cover the .moon,-at . | 12388-a. mi-The moon :appeaped little -dif--. ferent until it. moved into the centre of the . Earth’s shadow, or umbra, at 1:33 a.m. ’ ‘The moon was totally eclipsed until 4:24 _am,, a:perlod of 1% hours. ‘As the total eclipse ended, the moon’s eastern edge brightened first, By 5:29 a.m,, the moon. appeared normal, but the end of the eclipse was not until about 6:40 _ am., when the moon. moved out of ‘the penumbra. : Earlier, Larry -Ciupik; associate astronomer at the Adler Planetarium, said the moon ‘“‘could appear copper-colored, or orange, or ‘even brick: red.” He and other scientists had predicted a‘more vivid than - usual color for this eclipse because of the large amounts of volcanic dust spewed | into the upper atmosphere recently by . volcanoes such as Mexico’s El Chinchonal. One reason for the long eciipse, scien- - tists said, was that the moon was near the. ‘Most distant point-it ever reaches in its . orbit around ihe Earth., The. farther the moon ig rom th ra Care tie arth je longer it it takes. ape throug arth's shadow. "he jit a the eee also was causes! -by the moon's passing through the centre of the Earth's shadow. Usually, it passes — through a smaller area of shadow above or below the centre, Case. closed VANCOUVER (CP) —A. Ministry af Human, Resources social worker told Vancouver family court Monday she closed the file on a case of suspected child abuse partly because her ’ workload did not allow her time to investigate further. Judy Ward, now a staff _ training co-ordinator for the, ministry, said she had recelved - child abuse complaints: ‘about a boy who was suspected of being | mistreated by his parents. Ward said she and a “With the boy’s mother in 4 September, 1977, and. of-' fered her support services. - _ Phe social... worker... sald. ' The Terrace Dog Club. recently. held Its second annual ‘Mother’ s Day Pet Parade’, All kinds of prizes were given from the.’‘Best Dressed’’ to Tallest (Dylan,. the Great Dane) to . Also ‘Best . Trick’ by Rusty. The draw for the af. oO ternoon was for the Mother’s Day bouget which was won for Mrs. Ann Netd by her son at the Safeway-- parking lot. . Smallest (Bear, the Yorkie). Mark. she closed the file in March, - 1978, without following upon the. case because she “had not had any further contact’ with the family or further * “yeporta of abuse for about - _ two months, _ The superintendent of family and. child service is seeking an order for per: manent guardianship of the . boy’ 8 yoUnger. brother, wha was apprehended in Hawail . in ‘April, 1931, while on vaction with his parents. - The family is from the * Vancouver area but cannot - “prohibits the identification - case, , testimony from ‘several, witnesses ‘that; the older’ -brother was suspected_oaf belng abused four years ago «. but ministry’ did not’ ap- prehended him, The soclal worker from” whom Ward testified that a- ministry child from his hume. ‘ 2 Our football was better’ than ingles, ", m : anid Cerzo,: “but they: took: aiivantige of * "thelr oppertunities,” fo | Kitimat players - ‘advance south | : ° Herald Siatf Weiter. a ‘KITIMAT— Ning awards went to: Kitimat: player’ x cin a “four city. tournament. held: during. the weekend. ~ Over 30. players from. Terrice, ‘Kitimat, ‘Prince: : Rupert. and: Smithers took ‘part in. : ‘playotfs:” . | The: ‘playotts: resulted in the. selection of players a : go io Vemion to compete in the B. Cc. Summer Games: “in. ‘August: °. , .. Dorothy Cheyne ‘and Rita’ ‘Stevenson from Kitimat ‘and Jennifer Eastwood and Fran Power of Terrace. were chosen for the ladies’ team. - . Ken Hutchin and Emmanuel Roberts from Kitimat join Terrace’s Neville’ ‘Hope ‘and Swarn Morn on the Men's Team. In junior competition, Kitimat’s Andrew Simpson and Mike Steponavicius were selected for the boy’s team along with Dean Boucher of Smithers... | Michelle Marleau, Miriella Gardin and Lisa Pires were chosen for the girls team, All are residents of ‘Kitimat. * . Theteams were selected on the basis of points as all players competed in singles, doubles and mixed play. - Canada wins - CELJE, Yugoslavia (CP) — _Canada’s largest in- ternational track and Field team since 1974 overpowered Yugoslavia for the second consecutive day Monday to win a ‘two-day competition. ° - More than. 70 Canadian athletes competing in 36 events scored 225° points compared to 152 for the Yugoslavian team, The Canadian women's team swept 14 of their 15 events _ while the men’s team tock first place in 13 of 21 events a3 they completed their first competition in Europe this summer. ° _Debbie Brill of Aldergrove, B.C., won the high Jump with "194 metres, Dana Wright ‘of Toronto won the 400-metre hurdles in 59.29 seconds, Sue Gibson of Ottawa won the javelin event with a throw of 53.86 metres, Francine Gen- dron of Laval, Que., won the $00 metres in .2 minutes, 5.64 seconds. and Rosemarie Hauch of Chesterville, Ont., won the shotpul with a throw of 16.56 metres, Angela Taylor of Toronto won the 2ki-metre sprint i in 2. 7 seconds. In the.men’s competition, Lloyd. Guss of Vancouver won the 400-metre hurdles in 50.33 seconds,. Tony Sharpe of Toronto won the 200 metres in 20.99 seconds, Simon Hoogewerf of Mission, B.C., won the 800 metres, Mark _ Bradley af Toronto won the pole vault with a jump of 4.80 metres and Boris Chambul of Toronte won the discus throw - with a‘distance of 60.42 metres. The Canadians also won thé 400. metre relays in both had scars on his body, and _ - public -health nurse met A be named. because the law . of juveniles in Rusrdlanshin 7 The court has: heard took over. the case . has . _ lawyer decided the evidence ... “of abuse was ‘not strong © enough to support faking the — men's and women’s competition. The Canadian team next-competes against Italy’ and. a - dual meet July 1, 13 and-14, “Werhave a tougher, more formidable opponent in the Italians next week, 50 this kind of meet will stand us in good stead,” said Canadian head coach Glen DiGeorgio. Angella Taylor of ‘Toronto won the 200 metre sprint in 22, 77 seconds. MOSCOW (Reuter) —A Soviet. civilian airliner crashed near Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport today, the -news, agency Tass reported. The agency ‘said there were victims, but sid not specify how many. ‘The plane was on a flight “between Moscow and the ‘West African capitals of Dakar, Senegal, and Freetown, Sierra Leone, the report said. Tass, quoting the Soviet Civil Aviation Ministry, said a commission had been set up to investigate the crash. The official ‘agency said’ the ministry has expressed deep. condolences © to relatives ofthe victims. Some Africans. were reported aboard the plane, The’ Botkin Institute, an elite Moscow - medical centre, deals ~ most . foreign patients in Moscow. . _ The Soviet Civil Aviation ° Minisiry, announcing the - crash, said a special i inquiry . would be set-up to in-* vestigate its Causes. The four-engined. airliner : had been bound for Sierra Leone with a stopover in : Senegal. West African diplomatic sources, who believed the plane was about half full, said the airliner crashed a ‘few minutes after it took off shortly ‘after... midnight Monday. night. . The ‘diplomatic. ‘ sources said there were at least 16 Sierra. Leone citizens on ~: - board and some Senegalese a _ Students. Buty the’ Soviet “state - airline © Aeroflot; ~. which .. “owned the craft, has not yet given a. list of: casualties to’ ff * the . embassies concerned, a | ~‘the sources said:-. The | Sierra’ ‘Soviet officials: said - they would. provide deiuils Wednesday. ~ There. were .no official indivations: of the cause of the crash.atid. Soviet Civil -. Aviation Ministry officials sald they would not add» anything to a brief an- - after “veine A Embassy. told reporters” ‘Soviets killed” nouncement by the news agency Tass. - Soviet authorities rarely - announce air crashes unless — _ foreigners are involved, and full casualty’ figures are hever given for accidents ‘on domestic flights. In February, 1981, as ‘many as 70 people were killed when a military aircraft crashed shortly takeoff from Leningrad airport. The Soviet press carried tributes to the victinis, who \ ut Commons | by the. ‘new. ‘Wimbledon ~Wimnbledion final? aan 21g: it, Bjgen Borg, ‘the fivetime imi “bledén ‘and - six-time: French ‘titlehold . whe, for. reasons of pride, decided: to * this’one gut?" "52 Q How about vain Lentil, the young Cagch, . who won nine-straight tournaments before being so~- unceremgniously” halted by - _ Sweden's youthful Mats Wilander in the - French championships? - « Or Guillerma ‘Vilas, lime at the Queen's Club? This is the mess.that big-time men's tennis finds itself today — a lot of guys all — dressed up with no place to go. There's no true champion, no No.1, This is one of tennis’s tragedies, em- phasized during the weekend here by Fred ~ Perry, the marvellous. British champion ree dominated the game in the early . th true - chnimploa can't be a part -player,” said Perry. “He must be an all- round champion, . capable ‘of winning .on any surface. We don't-have that now, nor ~ the prospect of one any time soon. “Today's players pick the tournaments on the surface ‘they like; they dodge the © surfaces they don’t like.”” . This year, Borg, who won five straight Wimbledon men’s titles, chose not to play - rather than qualify under .existing rules. Lendl, with a splendid game and record, used the lame excuse that he was allergic to grass. Argentina's Vilas and Jose-Luis Clere Brock-slams homer ~ - Albuquerque's Greg -Brock slammed his 33rd - homer and brought in his 100th RBI of the-season — tops in Pacific Coast League baseball — as. the Dukes elebbered Spokane’ 10-1. The league’s division ~ leaders also scored vic- tories Monday as Edmonton won 11-7 at Phoenix and Salt ‘Lake won.10-4 at Portland. “‘Tatomi Paired a 4-4 victory ak “HaWail! aint Vaneouver” - rallied’ ‘at ‘home to clip Tucson 5-4, Vancouver rallied for - three runs in the bottom of - the eighth inning and then — - hung on to’ defeat Tucson. Tucson took a 2-0 lead into, the bottom’ of the seventh inning, when Vancouver tied it. Catcher, Steve Herz ‘began Vancouver’s eighth- - inning rally with a single. Doug Loman scored him with’ a double and later — scored himself on a single by Bob Skube. Stan Davis, who had been intentionally’ walked, also scored on Skuhe's single. In Albuquerque, pitcher Rich Rodas went the distance .against Spokane, holding the Indians to four hits and raising his, record - to 10-2. included the commandér of. Spokane’s Mike Brown the Soviet Pacific: fleet, Admiral Emil. Spiridonov, and several generals. But the press gave no details of. . the crash. ~ was the only Indian to score | off Rodas, belting his eighth home run on the season in the seventh inning.” A‘ grand = slam _Ol = tll septal “argentina’s 5 . comeback topspin clay-court specialist who won 45 consecutive matches before - also losing to Wilander at Paris? Or maybe Connors, who now has beaten McEnroe twice in three weeks, the last 1+ The nerd Tyosdah, July 6, 1902, row 7. ill tops? ad logitimate reasons: bitternes of the Falklands war between their. country. Contos ‘No.2, \ with “Lendl and * Vileg sit. ‘Vilas. and MeEnroe. - Slam évents — the Australian, “Wimbledon, : French and U S., the first two on grass, the: order. Only two men ever won the four events in one year, Don Budge of the U.S, did it in 1938 and Australia's Rod Laver in 1062 as “an amateur and 1969 ag a. pro. Both scored remarkable feats no one in today’ 8 selfish, commercial climate has come close to emulating. . Borg has-won five Wimbledons on frase and six French on slow clay, yet he has failed: repeatedly in the U.S, Open on. Flushing Meadows's fast concrete. McEnroe .and Connors have both won Wimbledon and the U.S,, but neither has won the French. Lendl, who has had'a meteoric rise, has. beaten McEnroe. in. their last five. meetings, yet he has never. won one of the Grand Slam tournaments. . *, The tennis establishment should. eliminate the Australian as a Grand Slam event, The distance of the bottom-of-the-. world continent no~ longer attracts representative fields. :- The wise thing to, do would be to add the Grand Prix Maalers, played indoor .on canvas, as the fourth leg behind the French, Wimbledon’ and the U.S., providing four tests on four surfaces! (carpet, clay, grass and concrete)... Then let the guys go for the Big Four. v- Edmonton designated hitter the season. folowing,” But a dew computer: ‘ranking’. introduced “by: ‘World: ‘Championship : ‘Tennis, ‘covering all ‘tournaments in the. _ “Wworld.with-a prize list ‘ol. $25,000. or over, < -°. ad Lendl No.1 and Coninirs No.2, followed ey _. French on clay and the American suc- “. ceaaively. os brass, clay. and cement inj -Dominic Fucci highlighted a six-run seventh-inning — outburst that helped ‘give _the Trappers a come-from- behind victory over Phoenix, Rod's Allen’ grand slam . home run capped a seven- ‘run fourth inning for Salt | Lake as the Gulls beat Portland. : Reggle Walton had a solo by The Giants answered with two runs in the bottom of the seventh, but Edmonton _Scored three times in the top of the ninth inning on Fran Mullins’ 1 home, rune Phe... Giants’ tried to muster. a rally in. the bottom of -the ninth as Paul Szymarek led “off with his 10th homer of home run in the fourth in- ning for Portland. Mitchell Page cracked a three-run’ homer — to -pMighlight..a5 fowrrreeifidth - Hawaii. Tacoma had tied the score in the fourth. , Termirial = Express: PICK UP & DELIVERY. 638 8195. Radio “Wossage Answering Service For Pager No.3] BUSINESS ROAD RUNNER SERVICE TO | TERRACE —THORNHILL --REMO —AIRPORT EA. GARNER LTD. ‘Terrace Bus Terminal 635-3680 F Price Busters _ (Terrace Only) * All Stock MUST GO For Renovations (Store will be closed July 12 and reopened July 13) 4662 Lakelse OPEN 9-6 Dally | 8 to 8 Thur. & Fri. “apd Britain wa still: too freth.:» wel, 7 “f “rme. last “ATR: had. McEnroe’ NoLand — -Unlil the eodh puter craze, ‘onris players: wee i Were judged on- thelr ability in the Grand. | -inning as: ‘Tacoma ‘defeated’ " wl.